Kentucky Survives Five-Set Thriller Against Wisconsin To Punch Ticket To Title Game
In a match that oscillated between “absolute disaster” and “instant classic,” Kentucky volleyball clawed its way out of a massive hole on Thursday night, defeating the Wisconsin Badgers in a five-set national semifinal that took years off everyoneโs lives. The Wildcats took the long road, winning 12-25, 25-22, 21-25, 26-24, 15-13, to book their spot in the NCAA Championship against Texas A&M.
A Nightmare Start For Kentucky
The first set wasn’t just bad; it was a horror movie. If you tuned in late, you probably thought there was a typo on the scoreboard. Wisconsin came out great, absolutely steamrolling the Cats 25-12.
It was Kentuckyโs worst deficit in a set since 2018. The Badgers hit a ridiculous .682, while the Wildcats looked shell-shocked, hitting .056. Wisconsinโs Carter Booth was unstoppable, and for about 25 minutes, it looked like Kentuckyโs season was going to end with a whimper, not a bang.
The Wildcats Claw Back
But this is why we play the games. Head Coach Craig Skinner clearly said something magical (or terrifying) in the huddle, because a different Kentucky team showed up for the second set. They stopped playing scared. They adjusted the defense. They started swinging.
While they dropped the third set to fall behind 2-1, the body language had changed. This wasn’t a blowout anymore; it was a brawl. The fourth set was pure chaos, with Kentucky staring down elimination. It took extra points, nerves of steel, and a defense that refused to let the ball hit the floor, but they squeezed out a 26-24 win to force a decisive fifth set.
Eva Hudson Takes Over
When the lights were brightest, Eva Hudson didn’t just step up; she kicked the door down. The senior outside hitter finished with a monster 29 kills. In the fifth set, with the season on the line and the score tight at 14-13, Hudson didn’t tip it. She didn’t play it safe.
“I just knew that I had to swing away,” Hudson said. “I wasn’t going to go out not swinging.” She buried the final kill, sending the Kentucky bench into a frenzy and Wisconsin home. Brooklyn DeLeye played the perfect sidekick with 15 kills and five crucial blocks, while Kassie O’Brien dished out 54 assists to keep the offense moving against a massive Badger block.
History On the Line Sunday
Now, the stage is set for a historic showdown. For the first time in NCAA Tournament history, the national championship will be an all-SEC affair. Kentucky will face Texas A&M, a team they already beat 3-1 earlier this season in College Station. The Wildcats are now just one win away from their second national title this decade. The last one came in the 2020-21 season.
